Los Angeles Times

With deal in place, MLB says let’s play too

Health protocols have been finalized, and players will report to training camps July 1.

- By Mike DiGiovanna

Players signed off on Major League Baseball’s health and safety protocols and agreed to report to training camps at their home stadiums by July 1 in preparatio­n for a pandemic-shortened regular season of 60 games.

“All remaining issues have been resolved and players are reporting to training camps,” the MLB Players Assn. tweeted early Tuesday evening.

The season, barring major outbreaks of the coronaviru­s, will start July 23 or 24 without fans and run through Sept. 27, with players and staff observing strict physical distancing rules.

The postseason is expected to remain at 10 teams

— the sides had discussed an increase to 16 — but the designated hitter will be added to the National League this season in an effort to protect pitchers’ health.

To minimize travel, MLB has submitted a schedule for union approval that will feature 40 games against division opponents and 20 interleagu­e games against the correspond­ing geographic­al division — NL West vs. American League West, NL Central vs. AL Central, NL East vs. AL East.

All extra-inning games will start with a runner on second base beginning in the 10th inning in order to prevent marathon games that could extend time at the park, lead to injuries and tax rosters.

Clubs can invite up to 60 players to training camp, and rosters will be expanded from 26 to 30 for the first two weeks of the season. The traditiona­l July 31 trade deadline will be pushed back to Aug. 31.

The agreement will allow any player who is considered high-risk for severe complicati­ons to COVID-19 — those with underlying conditions such as Type 1 diabetes or heart problems — to opt out of the season and still collect his salary and service time.

According to USA Today, MLB also agreed to the union’s proposal that all players who cohabitate with a high-risk individual, including a pregnant spouse, have the right to opt out and be paid while receiving service time.

The wife of Angels star Mike Trout is due to have the couple’s first child in August.

“Major League Baseball is thrilled to announce that the 2020 season is on the horizon,” Commission­er Rob Manfred said in a statement. “We have provided the Players Associatio­n with a schedule to play 60 games and are excited to provide our great fans with baseball again soon.”

The usual 162-game, sixmonth marathon that rewards teams such as the Dodgers for their depth and endurance will be replaced by a 60-game, two-month sprint that could allow a lesser team to ride a hot streak into the playoffs.

“There are going to be surprises, that I can guarantee you,” Hall of Fame pitcher and television broadcaste­r John Smoltz said Tuesday on a conference call for an upcoming celebrity golf tournament. “And those surprises might be refreshing in a sense that you didn’t see that coming three months ago.”

The Dodgers, with their rotation of Walker Buehler, Clayton Kershaw, David Price, Alex Wood and Julio Urias, have such a deep pitching staff that 2018 AllStar Ross Stripling probably will open the season in the bullpen.

The Angels’ rotation is thinner, but in a short season, that deficiency could be offset by first-year manager Joe Maddon’s creative use of a deeper bullpen.

“There could be some scenarios where the pitching staffs that wouldn’t be able to do what they could over 162 games might do something different for 60 games,” Smoltz said. “So, I think you’ll see some creativity that will allow a team to [improve their chances of making] the playoffs.”

A greater sense of urgency will be attached to each game, each series, each week, in a shortened season, forcing managers to be more aggressive in how they use their bullpens and less patient with struggling hitters.

“The teams that were great before this happened are still going to be great, but there’s going to be a lot more pressure on them, because in a 60-game schedule, I think you’ll have 25% more teams that can compete that had no idea if they could compete for 162 games,” Smoltz said.

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